Showing posts with label Presto. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Presto. Show all posts

Monday, October 25, 2021

348. Prestokolate from CFC: PRESTO CHOCOLATE, Print Ads 1968-1978

PRESTO CHOCOLATES OMNIBUS AD, 1971

The Consolidated Food Corporation (CFC) was founded in 1961 by John Gokongwei Jr., and, after surveying the local coffee landscape, decided that there was room more for new coffee brands. The market leader then was the post-war brand Café Puro of Commonwealth Foods Inc., which, by 1951, had become the no.1 selling coffee brand, a position it kept till the 1960s. 

PRESTO CHOCOLATE DRINK, Print Ad, 1969

CFC was ready to expand its business into new lines, and, after the Coffee, it  set its sights on the Chocolate market. SERG’s at that time, was the indomitable presence in that category, and CFC was now poised to challenge the iconic leader.

PRESTO, LUSCIOUS BITES O'FUN, Print Ad, 1970

In the late 60s, under the PRESTO brand name, CFC launched its first offerings—PRESTO Chocolate Drink, PRESTO Cocoa and PRESTO Chocolate Bar. The brands were supported by an aggressive marketing campaign that was heavy on advertising and point-of-sale materials.

HA-HA-HAPPY PRESTO CHOCOLATE BARS, Print Ad, 1971

As expected, the new PRESTO Chocolate line were favorably received, but what chocolate lovers really went for were the classic chocolate bars. It was but a matter of time that PRESTO developed this bar line and unleashed a multitude of versions and flavors that came to include such variants as Marzipan, Chocolate Peanuts, Almonds, Cashew, Raisins, Orange, Milk Chocolate, Apollo, Milky Bar, Manor House, Krispy Bars, and Wafrets.

PRESTO Manor House, Milky Bar, Apollo, Print Ad, 1978

The intent to create an images for PRESTO as a “Chocolate Master Maker” succeeded as the chocolate products enjoyed varying levels of success. The chocolate drink and cocoa were later dropped, as focus shifted to the chocolate confections. The decision proved to be wise as PRESTO Chocolates--made more appealing with a more polished, trendier, fun-filled advertising-- continued to slay the market, with some products becoming bywords among the younger set.  PRESTO Chocolates thrived all the way to the 1970s decade. PRESTO became a mother brand or its ice  cream line which also enjoyed some success.  

While today, the chocolate bars are long gone from store shelves, the PRESTO name continues to be  carried by the filled snack biscuits and sweets of Universal Robina Corp. (URC),, the new corporate name of CFC today.

Wednesday, December 5, 2018

194. WHEN COLGATE WAS A SOAP BAR, AND HUNT’S WAS CANNED FRUIT COCKTAIL…



Just the mention of iconic brand names like COLGATE, PALMOLIVE, or PUREFOODS instantly conjure images of the products they represent: Toothpaste, Shampoo, Meat Products, respectively. But at one point in their brand history, the names were also applied by their companies to other products, now long gone. Here are some of them.
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1. COLGATE SOAP (1956)
Since its launch as a toothpaste brand in 1873, COLGATE has, at one point, become a generic name for toothpaste. It was the first to be packaged in tubes in 1896. Colgate is associated with oral hygiene with products like mouthwashes, toothbrushes, and dental floss. COLGATE Toothpaste was introduced in the Philippines in 1926 by the Palmolive Co, Philippines, which, in 1949, became Colgate-Palmolive Philippines.  Palmolive was known for its soap, so this is probably the reason that in 1956, COLGATE SOAP was introduced to the Philippine market. The idea didn’t catch on—maybe it conjured images of brushing your mouth with soap!


2. HUNT’S FRUIT COCKTAIL (1957)
HUNT’S is an iconic brand name, founded ay back in 1888 in California. It is well-known as a maker of preserved tomato products like sauce, paste, expanding into tomato-based pork and beans—which has become synonymous with the name. HUNT’S Pork and Beans is known by almost every Filipino in the 1950s as it was a staple “emergency” canned product. Not very many know that there was also a HUNT’S FRUIT COCKTAIL introduced in the Philippine in 1957. That’s because the original company, Hunt Bros. Fruit Packing Co.,(founded by Joseph and William Hunt) also canned fruits and vegetables, a business which boomed in California. The product did not really do well locally.


3. LADY’S CHOICE VIENNA SAUSAGE (1965)
California Manufacturing Company (CMC) was established in 1955, and immediately became well-known for its line of spreads that included jams and mayonnaise. LADY’S CHOICE was one of the company’s early brand successes in the Spreads Market. The first products were LADY’S CHOICE Jelly, Preserves, Mayonnaise, and by 1965, the line had expanded to include other food products like macaroni, spaghetti, and of all products—LADY’S CHOICE VIENNA SAUSAGE! Eventually, the canned sausages were phased out after CMC realized that the spreads (Mayonaisse, Salad Dressing, Sandwich Spread) were the Lady’s Choice brands that were bringing in the money. Unilever bought the company, along with Bestfoods in 2000.


4. PALMOLIVE POMADE (1955)
The world was introduced to PALMOLIVE in 1898, when the B. J. Johnson Soap Co., gave us a soap bar made of palm an olive oil, hence the brand name that endures to this day. PALMOLIVE Soap was known to Filipinos in the late 1920s when it was distributed in the Philippines by Palmolive Co. Phils. The soap brand even became more familiar after the merger with Colgate,  and  the PALMOLIVE line was soon extended to include talcum powder, shampoo, and male-oriented products. In the mid 1950s, the company launched PALMOLIVE POMADE—“the pomade for successful men”. There was also, briefly a PALMOLIVE  Skin and Hair Tonic, produced at the same time. Apparently, the brilliantine pomade and tonic did not last long, but PALMOLIVE as a soap and shampoo brand proved to be more enduring.


5. POND’S LIPS LIPSTICK (1960)
POND’S, has a rich, 150 year history as the maker of POND’S  Cold Cream, the world’s first moisturizer that does not require refrigeration, and POND’S Vanishing Cream, which made women’s skin soft, supple and dewy. In 1846, American pharmacist Theron Pond developed the Pond’s Extract, with a unique tea extract from witch hazel that helped restore skin damage below the surface. The face creams were introduced to the country when the POND’S Company merged in 1955 with the Chesebrough Manufacturing Co., which already had an extensive line-up of facial care products. By the 60s, POND’S was an established brand of cosmetic beauty products. An effort to extend the line to include make up products was attempted in 1960 with the launch of POND’S LIPS—lipsticks “for irresistible lips”. But  Filipinas resisted the idea, preferring the facial cream more instead,  so POND’S LIPS was discontinued.


6. PRESTO COFFEE (1962)
The taipan George Gokongwei founded the Consolidated Food Corporation in 1961. It is best known for producing Blend 45 that gave Nescafe and Café Puro a run for their money. Next, CFC launched its chocolate products, so the PRESTO brand. With treats like Nips, Manor House, Milky Bar, Apollo Chocolate Bars and Wafrets, PRESTO came to be associated with chocolates. There was even a PRESTO Cocoa and PRESTO Chocolate Drink. But PRESTO did not start as a name for chocolates—but as a coffee brand. In 1962, PRESTO COFFEE was launched by CFC as a complement to Blend 45. PRESTO COFFEE was retired when CFC decided to single-mindedly build the Blend 45 brand which was enjoying tremendous  market success, and make it their flagship brand. PRESTO later was used as a name for CFC’s ice cream brand, and today, it is acookie brand of Universal Robina Corp. (URC).


7. PURE FOODS JAM (1965)
Founded in 1956, PURE FOODS was put up in Mandaluyong by a group of enterpreneurs which first produced hams, bacons and hot dog sausages.  It is in the manufacture of quality meat products that PURE FOODS built its name. Over the years, however, it forayed into other food products—making catsup, chili con carne, bottled pickles—and in 1965, the company put out PURE FOODS JAMS. The bottled spreads included Mango, Pineapple, Guava, and Mango-Pineapple. Eventually, PURE FOODS stuck to making products it knew best, and today, it is the leading maker of quality meat products in the country.